Lantos Foundation Statement on the Release of Aung San Suu Kyi

Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, the face of the pro-democracy movement in Burma, was released over the weekend by the military rulers of her country. Suu Kyi has been held at her lakeside home under house arrest for the last 7 ½ years for her pro-democracy activity and has become a global symbol for human rights and democracy. This courageous and graceful leader is a powerful example of what one person can do to stand up against repression. Through her brave example she has inspired countless others who are carrying forward her fight for democracy both in her homeland and elsewhere. The power of her example is evidenced by the thousands of Burmese who gathered outside her home to celebrate her release and by the millions more around the world who are hailing the end of her detention.

On Sunday, Aung San Suu Kyi spoke to her jubilant followers clearly signaling her intention to continue as the leader of the pro-democracy forces in Burma. When she addressed the cheering throngs she said, "The basis of democratic freedom is freedom of speech". She also reminded them to pray for the thousands still imprisoned by the military junta. Making it clear that her commitment to democracy was undiminished by her years of captivity, Suu Kyi said, "You have to stand up for what is right."

There can be no doubt that Aung San Suu Kyi has stood up for what is right at great personal cost both to herself and her family. She has done this because she believed it would make a difference – it has. There are thousands of others like her who, at their own peril, fight human rights battles on the front lines in places like China and Sudan. These brave individuals deserve our recognition and steadfast support. “Whatever the motivation of the military leaders of Burma, we support their decision to release Aung San Suu Kyi. Furthermore we call upon the government to lift all restrictions on her activities and to allow her to travel freely both within Burma and abroad and of course to be able to freely return to her homeland. Perhaps, Aung San Suu Kyi may wish to travel to Oslo, Norway, to honor Liu Xiaobo her fellow Nobel Laureate and pro-democracy activist, who at this very moment continues to languish in prison in China,” said Dr. Katrina Lantos Swett, President of the Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice.

Statement on the Trial of Jailed Businessman Mikhail Khodorkovsky by Katrina Lantos Swett

On Tuesday, November 2, the second show trial of Mikhail Khodorkovsky concluded amidst calls from human rights groups, Russian intellectuals, and celebrities and government leaders from the West, for an end to what is clearly a case of political persecution that has made a mockery of the rule of law and has turned the Russian judiciary into an instrument of political revenge.

The record of abusive conduct against Mr. Khodorkovsky and his co-defendant Platon Lebedev in the course of this legal battle is lengthy and pervasive. But at its heart, this case is not only about the law. It is about freedom and individual rights, which laws are meant to protect, and whether the state has the power to rob, threaten, and jail, those who dare to challenge it.

In his eloquent “last words” to the court, Mikhail Khodorkovsky said “They turned us, ordinary people, into symbols of a struggle against lawlessness. This is not our achievement. It is theirs.” It is a shameful achievement and one that demands a strong and unyielding response from people of goodwill around the world.

In 2005 when the first verdict against Mikhail Khodorkovsky was pronounced, Congressman Tom Lantos stood on the steps of the Moscow courthouse to denounce the verdict and to warn that it symbolized both an individual miscarriage of justice and an ominous sign of Russia’s slide back toward authoritarianism. As we await the verdict of this 2nd trial, the world must again speak out against lawlessness, creeping tyranny, and fear.

In his last remarks Mikhail said “I am not at all an ideal person, but I am a person with an idea” What is that idea? “…that Russia will after all become a country of freedom and of the law…where supporting opposition parties will cease being a cause for reprisals…where human
rights will no longer depend on the mood of the Tsar. Good or evil”

This is an idea worth fighting for, not only for the people of Russia, but for people everywhere. That is why the Lantos Foundation joins with so many others - human rights activists, government leaders, and millions of ordinary people - in calling for the release of Mikhail Khodorkovsky and a return to integrity and rule of law for the people of Russia.

Lantos Foundation Announces Recipient of 2010 Lantos Human Rights Prize

New York, NY, October 6, 2010 – The Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice announced today that it will award the second annual Lantos Human Rights Prize to Professor Elie Wiesel for his unwavering commitment to the cause of human rights around the world.

The author of the internationally acclaimed memoir Night, which has been translated into more than thirty languages, Professor Weisel has received numerous awards for his literary and human rights activities. Soon after receiving the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1986, he and his wife Marion established The Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity to fight indifference, intolerance and injustice. Wiesel has defended the cause of Cambodian refugees, victims of famine and genocide in Africa, victims of apartheid in South Africa, victims of war in the former Yugoslavia and is currently bringing attention to the political and legal injustice in Russia evidenced by the wrongful imprisonment of former YUKOS Oil CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky.

The Lantos Human Rights Prize is given annually to raise awareness about human rights and the brave individuals who are committed to fighting for them throughout the world. The prize also serves to commemorate Congressman Tom Lantos, the only Holocaust survivor ever elected to the U.S. Congress and a prominent advocate for human rights worldwide.

"Elie Wiesel embodies the spirit of the Lantos Human Rights Prize and the Foundation's mission, and we are pleased to be able to honor him and his contribution to the cause of human rights. He shares Tom's unwavering commitment to take the experiences of his youth and use them to fuel a passion for advancing human rights to all people. He is living proof that the powerful, eloquent voice of one man can help make the world a more tolerant and just place."

About the Lantos Foundation

The mission of the Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice is to strengthen the role of human rights in American foreign policy and to be a vital voice in standing up for our nation’s most important values of decency, dignity, freedom, and justice in every corner of the world.

The Award Ceremony will be held on November 17, 2010 in New York City. For more information, please contact the Lantos Foundation at 603-226-3636 or visit www.lantosfoundation.org.

Press Release: Hungary to Establish Lantos Institute Later this Year, Prime Minister Viktor Orban Announces Establishment of the Lantos Institute in 2010

The Lantos Foundation welcomes with great enthusiasm the announcement from Prime Minister Orban that later this year Hungary will establish "The Lantos Institute" which will be based in Budapest and established to promote minority and human rights.

The announcement was officially made in Washington DC on June 24th by Hungary's new Minister of Foreign Affairs, Janos Martonyi, during his meeting with Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton. Secretary of State Clinton, who was a close colleague and admirer of the late Congressman Tom Lantos has been deeply supportive of this initiative and expressed her hope to be present in Budapest for the inauguration of the Institute.

Mrs. Annette Lantos, chairman of the Lantos Foundation said, “We have long believed that such an institute will serve to strengthen the Transatlantic Alliance; while cementing Hungary’s reputation as an emerging leader in the human rights field and serve as an important vehicle for strengthening the forces of tolerance throughout Europe.

The Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice wishes to express our deep gratitude for this commitment, and once again congratulate Prime Minister Orban on the progress that Hungary is beginning to make under his dynamic leadership.”

Annette Lantos' statement for The Christians United for Israel Summit in Washington, DC

"I am deeply grateful to be here, and honored to accept this award on Tom’s behalf.

My husband Tom and I first met when I was six. And we spent the next 70 years as sweethearts.

His love affair with Israel was almost as long. And like ours, it was an epic romance.

As a survivor of the Holocaust, Tom’s first visit to Israel touched him in ways that are almost impossible to describe. Against the backdrop of the unconscionable devastation of European Jewry, he saw Jewish families working to build a future amid the rocks and sand. And he saw a people committed to making the dessert bloom, and fulfilling the promise of the Holy Land.

Tom also realized that Israel’s future was uncertain. He had seen enough of the world and enough of war to know that the line between Israel’s survival and Israel’s destruction was paper thin. So he made it part of his life’s mission to stand for Israel – to work for a world in which its people would live without the fear of another Holocaust.

Tom also recognized that people of good will from all faiths would have to join in this cause. During the Second World War, his life had been saved through the intervention of a Swedish Lutheran named Raoul Wallenberg. And he knew that in the fight to secure Israel’s future, Christians would have to show that same commitment a million times over.

Tonight, we can look out on this room and see the awakening in the hearts of thousands of Christians who have accepted that call. Like my husband, you have made a commitment to stand with Israel.

It fills me with emotion – and hope – to know that so many Christians are coming together to support the aspiration of a secure and lasting homeland for the Jewish people. It is a phenomenon that can only be explained though God’s divine intervention.

Pastor and Mrs. Hagee, you have been the pioneers in working to turn this extraordinary moment into a movement. And I thank you for your work to cultivate this great awakening. If Tom were here, he would be as honored as I am to accept this Defender of Israel Award.

Before he died, Tom asked me, our daughters, and our 17 grandchildren to work to carry on his legacy. And with help from thousands of supporters, we have created the Lantos Foundation to continue his work. The Foundation raises its voice when others are silent. It calls the world to remember the evils of the past so they are not visited upon the future. And it seeks to create a world in which all people – and especially the people of Israel – will be able to live their lives free from fear.

As I receive this award with humility and gratitude, I ask you to join us in this work. Israel has made great progress since Tom’s first visit. But the task of defending Israel is never finished. It has been a constant – from the time of the prophets down through the present day. And we must continue that legacy of courage and commitment. It is our responsibility and our sacred inheritance.

On behalf of my husband and the Lantos Foundation, I look forward to continuing with you in this great cause. And may God grant us the peace of Jerusalem."

Statment from the Tom Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice: Keep America's promises in the fight against Global AIDS

From the U.S. it is hard to imagine the misery of the African continent, where 22.4 million people are living with HIV, and AIDS is the number one cause of death. Africa has the highest rates of tuberculosis (TB) in the world and 90 percent of all deaths from malaria occur on this continent. Before his death in 2008, California Congressman Tom Lantos fought to extend America’s hope to those suffering around the world. As a survivor of the Holocaust, he understood personally the impact U.S. involvement could make on the outcomes of a global tragedy like these deadly infectious diseases in Africa—in the form of infections prevented and lives saved.

The last major piece of legislation Lantos authored was the U.S. Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria Act of 2008. In this bi-partisan effort, Lantos and his Republican colleague Illinois Congressman Henry Hyde worked to reauthorize the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). It has been one of the most successful global health programs in history. Like the Marshall Plan, which restored the devastated continent of Europe after World War II, PEPFAR, commonly known as Lantos-Hyde, put the global AIDS program on a path that has built greater local capacity to respond to communities in crisis. This landmark law is a rare bipartisan success story. It was championed by majorities in both the House and Senate, with strong backing from then-Senators Barack Obama and Joe Biden.

Tom Lantos was proud of the leadership role the U.S. played in expanding access to the blessing of HIV/AIDS treatment to those around the world who would otherwise needlessly suffer and die. Before PEPFAR, hospitals were clogged with AIDS patients. Instead of going to school, children, mainly girls, were obliged to stay home to care for their dying relatives. Tom Lantos believed treatment would save the lives of many HIV-positive African teachers and nurses at risk of dying of AIDS—and it did. He saw treatment as a way to avoid the enormous suffering, death and financial cost that results when millions of children are left to fend for themselves as orphans and when entire communities collapse. It contributed to prevention by making people who are living with the HIV virus less infectious to others. Lantos-Hyde called for a major expansion of prevention services, including prevention of HIV transmission from mother to child and greater access to proven, effective measures like circumcision for men.

For Tom, investment in HIV treatment and prevention was a wise and worthy investment for America to turn the tide, prevent death and suffering, and address the looming global impact of the AIDS pandemic in the future. Before he died, he spoke often about the Lantos-Hyde law, because he saw HIV/AIDS as a defining moral issue for our time. He called the lack of access to treatment a “fundamental injustice.”

But, today, the legacy of a bold and hopeful vision for the future for millions suffering from and affected by HIV, left to us by Tom Lantos and Henry Hyde, is faltering.

The global financial crisis has undoubtedly left the world in a state of uncertainty about our economic future. Nevertheless, among the difficult choices that have to be made, underfunding Lantos-Hyde should not be one of them.

Last December, Senators Barbara Boxer and Johnny Isakson, joined by six Senate colleagues, sent a letter to President Obama warning that “the success of our HIV/AIDS program is potentially compromised by a proposed slowdown in funding.” Another letter from nearly 300 physicians and scientists to the House Appropriations Committee leadership characterized the President’s FY11 budget as a “retreat” in the fight against AIDS. In May, a report from Doctors Without Borders showed a dramatic deceleration in the expansion of AIDS treatment, due in part to a decline in the pace of U.S. global AIDS funding.

Right now, the number of people in need of AIDS prevention, treatment and care services greatly exceeds the supply. Without a serious, scaled up response by the U.S. and other major global donors, the health delivery infrastructure put in place to provide life-saving drugs,
vaccines, and other critical health services for people with HIV as well as communities at large, especially in African countries, will begin to erode under the weight of millions of sick and dying men, women and children.

The U.S. has a moral imperative to re-assume its leadership role in the fight against HIV– by scaling up treatment and prevention investment, and rededicating our efforts towards the goal of universal access of HIV medications to all in need.

To some, scaling up HIV treatment and prevention is seen as a burden on the U.S. taxpayer. Instead, it should be seen as an investment that has already paid for itself many times over in good will towards our country and hope restored in African communities. Unfortunately,
Congress is now on course to provide little or no funding increase to AIDS programs.

TB stands out as being woefully underfunded. It is the biggest killer of people living with HIV/AIDS, and Lantos-Hyde requires the Administration to set forth a bold strategy on the disease. Currently, the administration is supporting a TB plan with treatment goals lower than those mandated by Lantos-Hyde.

The Obama administration’s $63 billion Global Health Initiative (GHI) calls for a “rebalancing” of the global health portfolio and is an important signal of the intention of the U.S. government to expand its leadership on global health. It is commendable. Unfortunately, the proposed funding will not accommodate both the scope of Lantos-Hyde and provide the additional funding proposed for neglected tropical diseases, reproductive, maternal and child health, and health system strengthening support.

The U.S. is retreating from its formidable leadership role in the war against the ravages of disease on vulnerable societies. This is a war in which all of humanity is a winner. It is worth the investment and the sacrifice.

Inadequate funding will pit disease against disease and patient against patient. A tiny fraction of the U.S. budget is needed to fully fund the programs authorized by Lantos-Hyde. Maintaining this level of commitment to the international fight against misery provides a clear example to the international community. This is the type of leadership that Tom Lantos, Henry Hyde, and all the supportive Democratic and Republican congressmen and congresswomen envisioned.

The U.S. must remain steadfast, courageous, and committed to defeating the AIDS pandemic and mitigating its heartbreaking implications for children and families. President Obama and Congress need to join together to put America back on course to keeping its promises.

San Francisco Airport Terminal Three Hub Renamed - Tom Lantos Rotunda dedicated in commemoration of Congressman's Life of Public Service

Internationally renowned human rights leader, and former Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Congressman Tom Lantos, will be honored today at the Dedication of the Tom Lantos Rotunda at the San Francisco International Airport.

Lantos who traveled extensively on behalf of human rights throughout his life was also a forceful advocate for the San Francisco International Airport which was in his congressional district. Congresswoman Jackie Speier, and numerous other dignitaries will join Mrs. Lantos and other representatives of the Lantos family on the occasion of the dedication of the Rotunda. Honoring Congressman Lantos, a permanent bronze plaque donated to the airport by the Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice will be unveiled at a 2pm ceremony in the Louis A. Turpin Aviation Museum in the International Terminal.

In remarks prepared for the occasion, Mrs. Annette Lantos, Congressman Lantos’ wife of 58 years said, “Most of Tom’s travel took him across the globe in pursuit of his great passion for human rights and justice. Many of those trips began and ended right here in the International Terminal of the San Francisco Airport. My husband had a 60 year love affair with San Francisco, and no matter where we found ourselves in the world he would always request that someone sing his favorite song—I Left my Heart in San Francisco!”

Press Release: The Lantos foundation forcefully condemns attack on Jewish group in Germany

Following an attack on a Jewish dance group at a cultural festival in Hannover, Germany, during which a group of Arab youths hurled rocks at the performers and injured one group member, the Lantos Foundation issued this statement:

It is deeply disturbing that in the heart of Europe, more than sixty years after the Holocaust, Jewish citizens are being targeted for violent attack. This incident is part of a rising tide of renewed anti-Semitism in Europe, the continent that witnessed the premeditated massacre of over six million men, women, and children of Jewish heritage. While the vast majority of Germans no doubt reject this appalling behavior, it is nonetheless shocking that such an incident occurred in the country most associated with the horrors of the Holocaust.

We call upon not only the German government but, more importantly, the German people and all Europeans to forcefully and unequivocally condemn this outrage. It is more than a little ironic that this unprovoked attack on Jewish people took place just a few weeks after a senior member of the Washington Press Corps asserted that the Jews should “get the hell out of Palestine” and go back to Europe.

The ancient poison of anti-Semitism is tragically alive and well in the world. Those who engage in an orchestrated campaign to delegitimize the existence of the only Jewish state will feed and spread this poison.

A Commentary by Annette Lantos Tillemann-Dick Regarding the Recent Conviction of Serbian Genocide Leaders

On June 10th the UN War Crimes Tribunal sentenced two Bosnian Serbs to life in prison for their role in the slaughter of 8,000 Muslim boys and men in Srebenica in the former Yugoslavia. The conviction and sentencing of Vujadin Popovich and Ljubisa Beara underscores a precedent set by the Nuremberg Trials after WWII. The Lantos Foundation for Human Rights and Justice emphatically supports that precedent of holding individuals responsible for their participation in acts of genocide.

Those who actively participate in efforts to systematically annihilate groups whose ethnicity or religion may differ from their own must be held accountable for these acts of conscious, willful inhumanity. Counter genocide expert, Mike Pryce, has identified distinct milestones on the road to genocide. Pryce says of the convictions which took place in the Netherlands, “This is an important way of holding individuals responsible for their part in directing a collective crime.”

The decision of the UN war crime tribunal represents a modest success in the effort to bring some of the culpable to justice. It also serves to warn others who may be involved in ethnically motivated killing. But these judgments came slowly and at an exorbitant price. Hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent on a handful of trials. At one point over $100,000 a month was being spent by the US to fund the defense of one Serbian accused of mass murders. If these resources had, even in part, been directed towards local community needs the benefits would have been remarkable.

Though the inflammatory content of the UN tribunal trials would have challenged the resources of many local courts, the State Courts of Bosnia are composed of part international and part local judges. Utilizing balanced national institutions to mete out justice would create more economically viable models for future offenses.

After the Holocaust of WWII, Jewish survivors took up the mantra, “Never again.” In the wake of every genocide, balanced, caring humans are universally motivated to cry, “Never again!” again. Unfortunately, the spectacles of mass human slaughters have become painfully common place in the 20th and 21st centuries. These atrocities mock notions of genuine human progress. Working in a multilateral way to intervene before such travesties occur and developing mechanisms to respond sanely and swiftly when the world community does not successfully counter crimes against humanity is essential to maintaining fundamental civility in a global community.

Annette Lantos' statement regarding Helen Thomas' remarks about Israel

Helen Thomas' remarks on May 27th have outraged people of good conscience across the globe. My late husband Congressman Tom Lantos and I both lost family members in Europe during the horror of the Holocaust. It was the searing experiences of our youth that led us to our profound commitment to fight for human rights and justice. Through our work in Congress and now through the Lantos Foundation we have worked to shine a bright light on the lingering evils of bigotry, hatred, and anti-Semitism in the often dark corners of the world. I never imagined that same bright light would be shone on the center chair of the White House Press Corps. It is almost inconceivable that the “Dean” of this distinguished group of talented journalists could have made such offensive and profoundly ill-informed comments. Helen Thomas’ deplorable views do nothing to foster peace in the Middle East, but rather encourage the behavior that has caused such misery in the region. Unfortunately, her tepid and evasive apology cannot undo the far-reaching damage that her thoughtless words fuel.